MK-Ultra Writer Hits Invisible Wall

Ann Diamond wrote her story of being a child victim of brainwashing experiments, she discovered that an invisible force, the Illuminati, controls discourse and publishing in Canada. “Successful people,” often mind-control victims themselves, are collaborators. Art and entertainment are means of inducting society into this satanic cult which controls the world.

“It didn’t occur to me that a series of grownup MK ULTRA children could have approached Canadian publishers over the years with similar stories of underground laboratories at universities and military bases, where children were kept in cages, raped, electroshocked, and worse.”

In 2004, I wrote a memoir about my childhood growing up as part a secret mind control experiment, one of hundreds across North America that operated under the black umbrella of the MK ULTRA program between 1953 and 1964.

As twin children of a Royal Canadian Air Force flight sergeant and his unwitting French-Canadian wife, my brother and I had been placed in a special program run out of McGill University`s Allan Memorial in downtown Montreal.

Based on two years and thousands of pages of research and correspondence with other survivors, my 400-page book recounted the story of a typical Canadian family caught up in a classified program most Canadians have never heard of even now.

I thought I had solved a great mystery that had damaged my generation (Baby Boomers) and haunted me throughout my life. In Montreal it seemed everyone I spoke to knew someone, or had a family member who had been harmed by the same McGill doctors – psychiatrists and neurologists – I was investigating, including several heroes of the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame.- I had only to mention the subject and stories poured out, which explained so much about our collective and personal experience, that I was naively convinced that some brave Canadian publisher would pick it up and market it to a wide audience.

I was unprepared for what actually happened. Editors, agents and publishers I contacted not only rejected it flat out, but seemed to know all about the top secret program without reading past the blurb. Most declined or failed to respond to my emails and queries, and the few who did said things which were downright weird, even slightly scary. “This book could never be published in Canada” – opined one Montreal editor, with astonishing self-assurance. How could she know that before she’d read it?